'Experienced' female lizards more likely to be courted by males

Washington, May 15 (ANI): Female sagebrush lizards with greater courtship experience tend to attract greater attention from their male counterparts, according to a recent study.

For the study, Mayte Ruiz, Zachary M. Beals, and Emilia P. Martins, collected 13 male and 26 female sagebrush lizards from the San Gabriel Mountains of Southern California and housed them in terraria at Indiana University, Bloomington.

During a two-week test period, half of the female lizards were assigned at random to a low-courtship treatment group that received one visit from a robotic male lizard every other day, while the other female lizards were placed in a high-courtship group that saw the robotic male lizard four times daily.

"Repeated male courtship may be beneficial to males if increasing female exposure to courtship displays advances reproductive state," wrote the researchers.

This also may help female lizards produce more fertilized eggs and breed earlier and more often.

After the two weeks of robotic lizard visits, a live male lizard was place in each female lizard's terrarium for 30 minutes.

The researchers paired each male sequentially with two females-one from the low-courtship group and one from the high-courtship group.

"In our study, male lizards distinguished between females that had received more previous courtship and those that had received less, directing more tongue-flicks and moving more often toward females that had greater courtship experience than when placed with females that received few displays," wrote the researchers.

"Although females did not differ in behavioral response due to display treatment, males may detect differences in physiological state of the female and respond accordingly," they added.

They note that additional research is needed to determine physiological differences between females with varied courtship experience.

The researchers also note that their study "used a robotic lizard to create differences between females that were not detectable to human observers, and an assay of male behaviour to detect those differences."

This shows how robotic stimuli can help manipulate animals in a controlled way for research purposes, they write.

The study has been published in the June 2010 issue of Herpetologica. (ANI)